Mind the gap between non-activated (non-aggressive) and activated (aggressive) indoor fungal testing: impact of pre-sampling environmental settings on indoor air readings

Author:

Efthymiopoulos Spyros12ORCID,Aktas Yasemin D.12ORCID,Altamirano Hector23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil Environmental and Geomatic Engineering (CEGE), University College London, London, UK

2. UK Centre for Moisture in Buildings (UKCMB), London, UK

3. Institute of Environmental Design and Engineering (IEDE), UCL, London, UK

Abstract

Indoor fungal testing has been within the researchers’ scope of interest for more than a century. Various sampling and analysis techniques have been developed over the years, but no testing protocol has been yet standardised and widely accepted by the research and practitioner communities. The diversity in fungal taxa within buildings with varied biological properties and implications on the health and wellbeing of the occupants and the building fabric complicates the decision-making process for selecting an appropriate testing protocol. This study aims to present a critical review of non-activated and activated approaches to indoor testing, with an emphasis on the preparation of the indoor environment prior to sampling. The study demonstrates the differences in the outcomes of non-activated and activated testing through a set of laboratory experiments in idealised conditions and a case study. The findings suggest that larger particles are particularly sensitive to the sampling height and activation, and that non-activated protocols, despite dominating the current literature, can significantly underestimate the fungal biomass and species richness. Therefore, this paper calls for better-defined and activated protocols that can enhance robustness and reproducibility across the research domain focused on indoor fungal testing.

Publisher

UCL Press

Subject

General Mathematics

Reference49 articles.

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3. Review: dry rot and other wood-destroying fungi: their occurrence, biology, pathology and control;J Singh;Indoor Built Environ,1999

4. Conducting building mold investigations;PA Heinsohn,2007

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